Gross US & Canada
$102,041
Opening weekend US & Canada
$9,683
Gross worldwide
$127,852
Gross US & Canada
$102,041
Opening weekend US & Canada
$9,683
Gross worldwide
$127,852
By Chesley 2022-10-12 19:08:36
No problem, no movie reviews because few people understand it?
Those who engage in technology do not understand the soul, and those who engage in the soul do not understand technology.
Artificial intelligence and life, life and the universe.
Come on, Let us be zhuangbility ~
First of all, what is the difference between artificial intelligence and soul?
When an object has a soul, and under what circumstances does it have a
soul?...
By Albina 2023-09-15 18:12:46
Live in your own way and see only what you want to see. The style is a little closer to Milosh Foreman's "The Runaway", but the attitude is just the...
By Junius 2023-09-10 07:09:45
Free and easy, that's what a "modern independent film" should be like. The trance has no point, the low fidelity texture brings a weird sense of mystery (even want to go to the next 480P to see it), and the last shot is very...
By Dee 2023-09-09 15:38:05
Unknown film. Mixing up things like computer chess and spiritual religion seems to be a metaphor for something. It is very real to restore the social environment and human state of the United States in the 1980s. The artificial intelligence implied by the empty head of the prostitute at the end may really be no different from our brains, making the film more of a black-and-white fable. Thoughtful computers are destroyed by accidents, just like film recordings are destroyed by accidental...
By Idella 2023-08-29 01:02:05
totally singular viewing...
By Elroy 2023-08-01 19:53:52
The director's shooting method is too fun, and the story is very...
Cameraman: Do you think a human being will ever beat a person at chess?
John: Oh... between a human being and a person? My money's on the computer.
Beuscher: Is there any possibility that this is uh... some kind of uh... very advanced... I mean, we just gave up a queen to get his queen and now we're basically just... um...
Pauline: Peter, did you ever stop and ask yourself how many squares are on a chess board?
Bishton: 64. It's an 8 by 8 grid.
Pauline: Well... but don't you see how limited that is?
Bishton: No, it's actually very complex once you start to think about it as a programming problem. Just the number of possible games explodes exponentially with each move, it's close to 10 to the 120th power. And to try and compute all those games might take even longer than humanity would be around to do so.